History Notes
History Notes
History Notes
Lesson 1
Contents:
Pre History (Lesson 2)
Ancient (Lesson 3-7)
Medieval (Lesson 8-10)
Modern (Lesson 11-17)
Lesson 2
The Stone Ages
Pre-history of the South Asian Subcontinent
Stone age: because people are using stone tools predominantly
Divisions on the basis of geological age, the type and technology of
stone tools, and subsistence basis
No written records (Pre-history);
People of the stone age also called hunter-gatherers - Ex: near banks
of Narmada
Reasons for movement from one place to another
1. sustainability - allow plants and animals to regenerate
themselves
2. animals move from place to place - prey, water, climate
3. plants and trees bear fruits in different seasons
4. seasonality of rivers and streams
5. Meet their friends and families*
Hints of agricultural settlements - evidence of rice grown near
Vindhyas 8000 years ago (6000 BC); Sulaiman and Kirthar Hills (wheat
and Barley) - rearing animals - sheep, goat and cattle; lived in villages;
Garo hills
Sources: archaeological sites - factory and habitation
Usually lived near water bodies
Evidence of fire (ash found) from Kurnool caves
Palaeolithic
Old Stone age
3 periods in India
Lower Palaeolithic: 2,50,000 to 1,00,000 BCE
Middle Palaeolithic: 1,00,000 to 40,000 BCE
Upper Palaeolithic 40,000 to 10,000 BCE
Several ice ages across the world
Hunsgi (site in India); Ostriches in India (Patne in Maharashtra)
Stone age tools found in Pakistan, Kashmir, Rajasthan, Southern Uttar
Pradesh, MP and Peninsular India
Mesolithic
Middle Stone Age
Transition period between the Palaeolithic and the Neolithic Age
Had characteristics of both
Microliths; older varieties of tools continue to be in use;
Climate stabilized to how we experience it now; development of
grassland => increase in number of animals => herding and rearing
Caused growth of new plant - several grain bearing grasses, including
wheat, barley and rice grew naturally in different parts of the
subcontinent; agriculture become possible
Domestication started; plants - wheat and barley; animals - sheep and
goat
Bagor in Rajasthan had domesticated animals (Adamgarh in MP also)
Bhimbetka, Madhya Pradesh has amazing mesolithic art
Neolithic
New Stone Age
Warmer climate, new plants
Development of agriculture and domestication of animals from 10,000
BCE
Use of fire
Neolithic tools - different from earlier paleolithic tools (tools of
paleolithic type continue to be made and used) - polished to give a
fine cutting edge; mortars and pestles used for grinding grain and
plant produce
weaving of clothes
first animal to be tamed - Wild ancestor of dog then sheep, goat,
cattle and pig;
The Neolithic Revolution: debate!
Earliest evidence of agriculture: Iran, Iraq, Israel, Palestine.
Neolithic Age: India
Mehrgarh; in Baluchistan, Pakistan now
On the route from India to Kandahar in Afghanistan - Bolar river
(near Bolan pass) - occupied around 7000 BCE - 2500 BCE
mud brick houses, square and rectangular houses, domesticated
cattle, sheep, goats
persons buried with goats (life after death?)
grew wheat, barley; pottery
Daojali Hading - route to China and Myanmar - evidence of trade;
Jadeite, tools made of fossil wood, pottery
Other sites: Mundigak (Afghanistan), Burzhom and Gufkral
(Kashmir), parts of Rajasthan, Assam (Daojali Hading), Bihar
(Chirand), UP (Koldihwa), UP (Mahagara), Meghalaya, Andhra
Pradesh (Paiyampalli, Halluru) etc. - bones and burns of grain
Tribes
usually two to three generations live together in small settlements
Most families are related to one another; groups of such families
form a tribe
some men are regarded as leaders (old/experienced/young/brave
warriors/priests).
Old women are respected for their wisdom and experience.
Rich and unique cultural traditions - language, music, stories and
painting
own gods and goddesses
land, forests, grasslands and water regarded as the wealth of the
entire tribe.
No sharp differences between the rich and the poor
After stone age:
6000 BP - Chalcolithic (first use of copper) - 4000 BCE
2600 BCE - Harappan Civilisation (Pushed back to 3300 BCE)
1500 BCE - Rigveda
1000 BCE - Iron, Megaliths
600 BCE - 400 CE - Early Historic
The Harappan Civilization
3300 - 1800 BCE
Named after the first discovered site
Divided into 3 phases - Early, Mature and Late
Spread from Afghanistan to Gujarat
An Urban civilisation
Harappan Civilisation => Mature Harappan culture (to distinguish it from
Early Harappan culture [distinctive pottery, agriculture, pastoralism, crafts,
virtually no large buildings)
Along the Indus Plains (Southern Afghanistan, Pakistan, north western and
central India)
Discovered in 1924 by John Marshall, the DG of ASI
Contemporaneous with Mesopotamia
Related trivia - Alexander Cunningham was the first DG of ASI. He came
across many Harappan artifacts during his investigations, but could not
place it in the then known time frame of the South Asian Subcontinents
history; preferred to use written word (texts and inscriptions) as a guide to
investigation.
proto-Historic (There are written sources from the Harappan Civilization,
but they have not been deciphered)
Culture - group of objects, distinctive in style, that are usually found
together within a specific geographical area and period of time;
Key features:
Subsistence Base
Ate plants, animals and fish (archaeo-botanists)
plants - wheat, barley, lentil, chickpea and sesame, linseed
and Mustard, Millet (Gujarat); Rice -rare
Animals - Cattle, sheep, goat, buffalo and pig
wild species - boar, deer and gharial
Bull and plough was known - ploughed field at Kalibangan
(Rajasthan)
Bull representation on seals
Terracotta models of plough - Cholistan and Banawali
(Haryana)
Water reservoirs - Dholavira (Gujarat) - semi-arid lands; canals -
Shortughai (Afghanistan)
Dholavira
Khadir Beyt in the Rann of Kutch
freshwater and fertile soil
large open ares in the settlement;
large letters of the Harappan script that were carved out of
white stone and perhaps inlaid in wood (generally small
objects)
Lothal
beside a tributary of the Sabarmati, in Gujarat, close to the
Gulf of Khambat
raw materials such as semi-precious stones; imp center for
making objects out of stone, shell and metal.
storehouse, dockyard, pieces of stone, tools, finished beads
Stone tools for grinding - Saddle querns, rollers pounder
Cotton cultivated at Merhgarh - 5000 BCE - spindle whorls made
of faience (used to make bangles, earrings and tiny vessels)
Mohenjodaro City Plan
urban centre - unique feature of the Harappan Civilisation
2 sections - citadel and lower town
Citadel - usually on the west, small and high, mud brick platforms,
walled and separated from the lower town - perhaps a
warehouse/ritual significance. Great bath at Mohenjodaro with
water tights bricks using PoP/gypsum
Lower town - usually on the east, low and large, walled
Planned settlements, bricks of a standardized ratio (used
throughout Harrapan settlements), Planned drainage in a grid
pattern (loose bricks to facilitate cleaning)
Streets on top of drains, houses built alongside
Labour was mobilized on a huge scale
Variations elsewhere
Mohenhodaro Houses - courtyard in the center, wells,
bathrooms connected to drains, no windows (concern for
privacy), staircases to second storey or roof, wells accessible
from outside
Dholavira (Rann of Kutch) - in 3 parts, each separately
fortified, entrance through gateways, large writing
Lothal - (near Gulf of Khambat) - has a dockyard, a store
house; also an important stone, metal and shell craft centre;
citadel not walled, built at a height
Craft Centres and Trade
Identifying centres of production: raw material, tools, unfinished
objects, rejects and waste material; craft persons (home? special
workshop?); probably specialists
Chanhudaro - craft centre (now in Pakistan) -bead-making, shell-
cutting, metal-working, seal-making and weight-cutting;
beads
stone - carnelian, jasper, crystal, quartz and steatite
Metals - copper, bronze and gold
shell, faience and terracotta or burnt clay.
made of alloys as well;
Nageshwar and Balakot - coastal towns - shell work - bangles,
ladles and inlay
Lapiz Lazuli obtained from shortugai, Afghanistan
Tin - Afghanistan, Iran
Carnelian from Lothal, Gujarat
Steatite from Rajasthan and Gujarat
Copper from Khetri region, Rajasthan (non-Harrapan culture also-
Ganeshwara-jodhpura Culture, pottery)
Copper also from Oman in exchange for Harappan jars (coated
with thick layer of black clay); Omani copper and Harappan
artefacts have traces of nickel;
Gold from South India - trade with neolithic settlements there
precious stone - Gujarat, Iran and Afghanistan
Limited trade with Mesopotamia
Internal as well as external trade
red pottery painted with black;
Social Differences
Study of burials
pits lined with bricks, some contain jewelry (all Sexes), one has
a copper mirror
pottery and ornaments - indicating a belief that these could
be used in the afterlife;
jasper
Harappans did not believe in burying precious things with the
dead
Artifact - Luxurious and utilitarion
Utilitarian - objects of daily use - querns, pottery, needles,
flesh-rubbers (body scrubbers)
luxury - Found mainly in large settlements like Harrapa and
Mohenjodaro
Faience (ground sand or silica mixed with colour, and gum
and then fired)
Gold - rare; all the gold jewellery found at Harappan sites was
recovered from hoards.
Hoard: objects kept carefully by people, often inside
containers such as pots.
Seals, Scripts and Religion
Undeciphered script written right to left + motif (generally an
animal);
seals for trade and identifying the sender
Standardized weights of chert (a stone), no marking
Weights - lower denominations binary, higher followed decimal
system; Metal scale-pans
Dancing girl bronze sculpture - lost wax technique
Sculpture symbolizing mother goddess, proto-shiva (crossed
legged yogic figure surrounded by animals, especially a bull and a
tiger), a 'priest king'
Ritual significance to Great Bath (Mohenjodaro) and fire altars at
Lothal and Kalibangan
No confirmed understanding of religious practices
State Structure and Decline
No confirmed theories of how the state was organised or why the
civilization declines
The Standardization of script, weights, bricks, settlements etc
show some centralized authority
Absence of palaces or archaeological sources depicting centre of
power confusing for historians
Three theories - no rulers, single ruler, several rulers
Late Harappan Centers/successor cultures
Theories of decline - changes in climate and flooding, 'Aryan
invasion', deforestation, shifting/drying up of rivers, overuse of
landscape, collapse of Harrapan site
appears that a strong unifying element, perhaps the
Harappan State, came to an end => disappearance of
uniformity in materials;
Between IVC and Early States
Agro-pastoral communities
Iron Age
Rigveda composed by People (Aryas) along Indus and its tributaries
Important gods - Agni (fire), Indra (warrior) and Soma (a diety, plant, and
drink)
Battles - land, water, capture people; wealth obtained - kept by leaders,
given to priests, distributed among people, sacrifice
People who didn't perform sacrifices - Dasas/Dasyas
no regular army; assemblies - met, discussed and chose leaders (often
brave and skillful warriors)
People - types
in terms of work: priests (brahmins); rajas
those who composed hymns - Aryas; opponents - Dasyus/Dasas - did
not perform sacrifices
jana/vish - community
Painted Grey Ware in Gangetic Plains and Ghaghar-Hakra velley, largest
site Mathura
Megaliths
Vedic Literature
Old and Later Vedic Literature
Old Vedic - 1500 BCE - 1000 BCE
Rig Veda Samhita - Book 2-7 - Pre-Classical Sanskrit
Later Vedic - 1000-500BCE
Everything else - Sanskrit deriving grammar from Panini's
Ashtadhyayi
sources of the Hindu social structure
Sources of ancient Indian past
Which one of the following four vedas contains an account of magical
charms and spells? (Prelims 2004)
Rig-veda
Yajur-veda
Sama-veda
Atharva-veda
Shruthi - that which is heard - Vedas
Smriti - that which is remembered - Vedanga, Puranas, epics,
Dharmashastra and Nitishastra
The Vedas
Root "Vid" - means "to know"
4 - Rig, Sama, Yajur, Atharva
Rig - oldest, 1028 hymns (suktas), 10 books (Mandalas)
hymns (composed by sages) => sukta (well-said) => praise of
various gods and goddesses;
Women - composed few hymns;
old or vedic Sanskrit;
recited and heard
Agni, Indra (warrior god), Soma (plant)
vishwamitra; Beas and Sutluj; horses, cows, Chariots, carts, Indus
and its tributaries; Ganga and yamuna - Named only once.
Sama - hymns borrowed from Rig, arranged according to musical
notation
Yajur - performance of rituals
Atharva - latest, contain hymns, spells, charms
4 Parts of Vedas
Samhita - main parts, the hymns
Brahamana - prose explanations of Samhita
Aranyaka - philosophical interpretation of rituals
Upanishads - Philosophical - esp. idea of atman (individual soul) and
brahman (Universal soul) - ultimately both were one;
contain conversations between teachers and students; simple
dialogues
occasional mention of women thinkers
meaning of life; possibility of life after death;
Vedanga Literature
600-200 BCE
supplementary to vedas
for recitation, use and understanding of the Vedas
Puranas
Literally - 'old'
By Vyasa (traditionally)
18 Mahapuranas, rest Upapuranas
From Vedic age till 5th century CE (roughly)
mythical and historical (eg. Royal dynasties of Chandravamshi and
Suryavamshi Kings)
contain stories about gods and goddesses, such as Vishnu, Shiva,
Durga or Parvati; details on how they were to be worshiped; creation
of the world
simple Sanskrit; meant to be heard by everybody;
Conception of time - yugas, mahayuga, kalpa, manavantaras
Epics: Ramayan and Mahabharat
Smriti and itihasa (traditional history)
Mahabharat - by Vyasa (attribute traditionally - but he couldn't have
lived for 800 years!)
Critical edition - 1919 V.S. Sukthankar
400 BCE - 400 CE
War between cousins Pandavas and Kauravas
Contains Bhagavad Gita - discourse of Krishna to Arjuna
Strong women characters - suggests freer position of women as
compared to Ramayan
Ramayan - by Valmiki
500 BCE - 300 CE
Story of Ram; Kosala prince
Many retellings
Jain - Paumachariu of Vimalasuri (Prakrit)
Buddhist - Dhasharata Jataka (Pali)
Tamil - Kamban by Iramvaratam
Ramacharitmanas by Tulasidas (16th Century)
Dharmashastras
3 parts
Dharmasutras (also part of Vedanga literature) (c. 600-300 BCE) in
2 parts
complex vedic sacrifices (at least 3 fires)
simple domestic sacrifices (1 fire only)
Smritis (c. 200 BCE - 900 CE) commentaries and conclusions from
different texts
Dharmashatras talk about the caste system and ashrama system
(brahmacharya, grihasta, vanaprastha and sannyasa)
study vedas, get sacrifices performed, make gifts - both Kshatriyas and
Vaishyas; Sudras - only one occupation - serving three 'higher' varnas.
Personal, civil and criminal law
Describe ideal society (eg - Manusmriti 200 BCE - 200 CE)
duties of the chandalas - ornaments of iron;
woman could not claim a share of paternal resources. Social
differences between men and women were sharpened because of
the differences in access to resources.
Stridhana - could be inherited by their children, without the
husband having any claim on it.
Gotra system - c. 1000 BCE
Stories by ordinary people
Jatakas (often shown on the railings of stupas and in painting in places
such as Ajanta) (written in Pali) and Panchatantra
Gandatindu Jataka - plight of the subjects of a wicked king;
Monkey king sculpture - stupa at Bharhut, MP -
Languages
1. Indo-European
Indian - Assamese, Gujarati, Hindi, Kashmiri, Sindhi, Sanskrit
European - English, French, German, Greek, Italian, Spanish
2. Tibeto-Burman
3. Dravidian
Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam
4. Austro-Asiatic
languages spoken in Jharkhand and parts of Central India
Writing
1500 BCE - first evidence of writing in China; writing were on Animal
bones (oracle bones); kings lived in cities, accumulated wealth; did not
know the use of Iron.
The Later Vedic Period
1000 - 600 BCE, Ganges plains
Parts of the Rig Veda, and the Sama, Yajur and Atharva Veda composed
Many other Vedic texts also composed
Mahabharat and Ramayan composed
Beginning of state structures, caste system
Development of Hindusim
Agriculture mainstay; sugar cane
performance of sacrifices, men became rajas by performing very big
sacrifices (ex: Ashvameda) (Shudras excluded from many rituals)
Development of weapons
widespread use of copper
Ochre Colour Pottery between Ganga and Yamuna
Painted Grey Ware in north western India - fine to touch, nice, smooth
surface - designs (simple lines and geometric patterns)
Black and Red Ware in UP and Bihar
Ancient Philosophers
1st millennium BCE - Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, Kong zi, Zarathustra,
Mahavir, Buddha
Zoroaster, Iranian prophet, teaching in Avesta, similar to Vedas, gave
maxim "Good thoughts, Good words and Good deeds" - followers of
Zoroastrians, ancestors of today's Parsis
Many philosophers in South Asia questioned the authority of the Vedas
and Brahmanism, emphasized individual agency
kutagarashala - huts where intellectual debates took place
Women and poor thinkers
Gargi - participated in debates at courts
Saryakama Jabala, son on slave woman Jabali was accepted as a student
by Gautama (a brahmin) - his ideas developed by Shankaracharya
Both their ideas used in Upanishads
Megalithic Cultures
No written records of life in Southern India corresponding to the Vedic age
in North India
Burials the most important source
1000 BCE; surface and underground; cist - type of megalith; some cists
have port-holes;
Found in central and south India, north east and Kashmir
Megalith means bid stone boulder - elaborate stone structures to cover
burials
sometimes burials in house;
Burials often contained iron tools, pottery (Black and Red Ware), bones
in urns, skeletons of horses, ornaments of stone and gold;
Site: Inamgaon, on river Ghod, tributary of river Bhima (tributary of Krihsna
river); Brahmagiri
Lesson 3
The Mahajanpadas
C. 600 BCE
Emergence of states; North India
Kings of oligarchies
Coins (punch marked - silver/copper), Cities, iron (iron ploughshare) ,
Technology (paddy transplantation - slaves and landless agri labourers ),
irrigation, weapons, taxes (sometimes; bhaga - tax of crops, usually 1/6th
of produce of craft producers, traders, sales, herders, hunter-gatherers),
armies
Raids on neighbouring states were recognised as a legitimate means of
acquiring wealth.
Food => iron ploughshare (dig deep) + paddy transplantation (improved
survival rates) + irrigation (some form of cushion from uncertain monsoon)
=> additional produce (used pottery to store it) => need to protect
additional produce => fortified cities (showcase of power, easy to control)
ex: Kaushambi (UP) + armies (regular salaries) => resources from fortified
city and armies (taxes - 1/6th of produce); ease economic activity => coins
Mahajanpadas: great states (approx. 16) -(Jana - community, Janapad -
land where people settle) - Ruled by kings (like Magadha) or oligarchies
called gana/sangha (like Vajji)
Vajji - Capital (Vaishali), form of government (gana/sangha), many rulers
(known as rajas) - performed rituals together, met in assemblies, decision -
discussion, voting; women, dasas and Kammakaras - not allowed in
assemblies;
Had capital cities, often fortified; remains of palaces and markets, homes
of ordinary man - not survives, probably not yet discovered.
sanitation: ring wells => toilets, drains and garbage dumps; usually found
in individual villages;
Period of development of diverse thought systems like Buddhism and
Jainism; charaka Samhita on medicine and ayurved written;
Dharmasutras - laid down norms for rulers - kshatriyas
Towns and Trade
Capitals of Mahajanapadas important trading, religious, political and
cultural centre
Yaudheyas, tribal republic of Punjab and Haryana also issued copper coins
Fought many battles with the Shakas of central Asia (who extended their
rule till western and north-western India). Defeated the Shakas of western
India.
Prakrit literature used for books and inscriptions
A Satavahana ruler and his wife: one of the rare sculptural depictions of a
ruler from the wall of a cave donated to Buddhist monks. c. Second
century BCE
Buddhism also flourished: Chaityas (prayer halls) and viharas (monastries)
built (sometimes carved out of rocks)
Karle, Maharashtra a famous vihara
At the end Vakatakas became powerful in central and western India.
silk Route:
techniques of making silk - first invented in China around 5000 BCE; Silk
Route
About 2000 years ago, wearing silk => fashion, status symbol;
Literary sources
Periplus of the Erythrean Sea (Red sea) - anonymous Greek Sailor (c. first
century CE) - Kodumanal (TN)
pepper, malabathrum (cinnamon), pearls, ivory, silk cloth, transparent
stones, diamonds, sapphires and tortoise shell- export
coin, topaz, antimony (colouring mineral), coral, crude glass, copper,
tin, lead - imports
Lesson 5
Sangam Literature
c. 300 BCE to 300 CE
3 literary meetings (sangams) at Madurai
In Tamil
Epics
Manimekalai by Sattanar
Silpaddikaram by Ilango
people brought gifts to the chief when he visited them
Described life in Southern India; important source of cultural, political and
social history
evidence of trade in the sangam poems:
Puhar (Kaveripattanam) - imp port on the east coast - horses, black
pepper, Gems and gold, Sandalwood, pearls, corals, crops, foodstuff,
pottery
Chera Chola Pandyas
The 3 chiefs together called muvendar - meaning "three chiefs"
Rulers of Tamilakam (ancient Tamil country, includes present day Andhra
Pradesh, Telangana, Kerala and Tamil Nadu)
Each had 2 centers - one inland and one coastal
Arikamedu
massive brick structure (warehouse?); Greek, Italy, Roman (pepper -
black gold)
Source: Sangam Literature (3rd Century BCE - 3rd Century CE)
Chiefs collected tributes and gifts, not taxes; military expeditions -
collected tribute => distributed among supporters (family, soldiers, poets)
- generally no regular armies and officials in chiefdoms;
Pandyas
600 BCE to 1600 CE
capital Madurai (Inland) and Korai (Coastal)
Traded with Rome
The Cholas
3rd century BCE to 13th century CE
Between Pennar and Velar rivers
North east of the pandyas
Capitals Uraiyur (inland) then Puhar (Kaveripattanam; coastal,
important port)
very fertile land between the pennar and the Velar rivers
Brihadeshwara temple, Gangaikondacholapuram, built in 1035 CE by
Rajaraja I
Chinese traveller Chau-Ju-Kua came to the Chola court in the 13th
century
The Cheras
present day Kerala
Between river Bharatappuza and Periyar
3rd century BCE to 10th century CE
Capital Muchiri (Coastal) and Karur (Inland)
Bhakti
Sanskrit term - bhaj - to divide or share; two-way relationship between the
deity and devotee;
Bhakti - directed towards the Bhagavat; Bhagavath - who possesses and
shares Bhaga, literally good fortune or bliss; devotee - bhakta, bhagavata -
shares his/her chosen deity's bhaga
Shiva, vishnu, goddesses such as Durga; worshiped through Bhakti (a
person's devotion to his or her chosen deity)
anybody (socio-economic) could follow the path of Bhakti.
Idea of Bhakti present in the Bhagavad Gita
emphasised devotion and individual worship of god or goddess, rather
than performance of elaborate sacrifices.
if a devotee worships the chosen deity with a pure heart, the deity will
appear in the form in which he or she may desire => beautiful images of
these deities
inspired - sculpture, poetry and architecture
The Guptas
First ruler: Sri Gupta
First important ruler: Chandragupta 1 (c. 320-335 CE) "maharaj-adhiraja"
ruled over Magadh, Prayag (Allahabad) and Saketa (east UP and Bihar)
Samudragupta: c. 335-380 CE
Allahabad pillar inscription aka Prayaga Prashasti is the most
important source
Inscription on an Ashokan pillar by court poet Harishena: says
Samudragupta fought many battles, performed Ashvameda sacrifice,
played the veena and wrote poetry - Kubera, Varuna, Indra and Yama
four different kind of rulers and Samudragupta's policies:
1. Rulers of Aryavarta - uprooted and kingdoms were made part of
Samudragupta's empire
2. Rulers of Dakshinapatha - red dots - surrendered to
samudragupta - allowed them to rule again
3. neighbouring states - purple - brought tribute, followed his
orders, attended his court.
4. blue - outlying areas- submitted to him and offered daughters in
marriage.
Chandragupta II aka vikramaditya: c. 380-412 CE - overcame last of the
Shakas
Chandragupta II's daughter Prabhavati Gupta married to Rudrasena II of
the Vakataka kingdom. When Rudrasena II dies, she rules over the
Vakatakas in the name of her young son.
Exceptional situation - she also commanded resources (against the
legality of that time) and made land grants. - inscription engraved by
chakradasa.
Iron Pillar in Qutb Minar describes Chandragupta II say he conquered
Bengal and Bactria
Fa-xian visited India during his reign.
untouchables had to sound a clapper in the streets
Xuan Zang and I-Qing came 50 years after
executioners and scavengers - forced to live outside the city;
Kumargupta: (412-445 CE) - fought against Hunas
Skandagupta: (445-467 CE) defeated the Hunas of Central Asia
After him, there were many Gupta rulers but the empire began to decline
Hunas occupied parts of the Gupta Empire, rest got scattered into many
states.
The economy, art and culture flourished under the Guptas.
Bhagvad Gita, Mahabharata, Ramayan attained its final form;
Kalidasa best known writer of his reign; According to popular theory, he
was a poet in Chandragupta II court; He wrote Meghduta, Abhijnana
Shakuntalam, Ritusamhara, Raghuvamsa, etc.
Other writers Bhasa and Shudraka
Aryabhatta also from the Gupta Age; Aryabhattiyam in Sanskrit.
Buddhist sculpture abundant
Temples of Deogarh, Bhitargaon and Bhitari built (all in UP)
Nalanda University founded
Many cities and ports were built
Crafts diversified and artisans traders benefited
Foreign trade boomed
Gold coins were plentiful. (finds declined after 6th Century - suggests
economic troubles, possibly related to the decline of the Roman empire)
Miniature painting
The Mughals
Mother side - descendants of Genghis Khan (died 1227); Father side -
successors of Timur (died 1404)
did not believe in the rule of primogeniture (eldest son inherited his
father's estate); followed Mughal and Timurid custom of Coparcenary
inheritance (division amongst all the sons)
common trends:
Afghans were an immediate threat to Mughal authority;
Relationship between Mughals and Ahoms
Relationship between Mughals and Sikhs
Relationship between Mughals and Mewar and Marwar
Chronicles
purpose
project a vision of enlightened kingdom
convey to those who resisted the rule of the Mughals that all
resistance was destined to fail
account of their rule for posterity
Humayun Nama - Gulbadan Begum; daughter of Babur
described in detail the conflicts and tensions among the princes
and kings and the important mediating role elderly women of the
family played in resolving some of these conflicts.
Akbar Nama - diachronic sense (recording politically significant events
across time)
translated into English by Henry Beveridge.
Badshah Nama - Shah Jahan
by Abu'l Fazl son Abdul Hamid Lahori
Divine Light (farr-i izadi); Shihabuddin Suhrawardi - Iranian sufi;
emperors wearing the halo - seventeenth century;
ideal of sulh-i kul - absolute peace;
capital cities:
Lodhi Capital of Agra; Babur - several places
Akbar - 1560s - Agra fort - red Sandstone; 1570s - Fatepur Sikri
(en-route to Ajmer); 1585 - Lahore
white marble tomb for Shaikh Salim Chisti next to the friday
mosque at Sikri
Shah Jahan - 1648 - Shahjahanabad
Babur (1526-1530)
Born 1494, Farghana
came to India in 1525, won the Battle of Panipat agaist Ibrahim Lodi
(Babur used Cannons effectively)
Fought many more battles and expanded his control over India (Agra
and Delhi)
Died in 1530
Left behind a dairy of memories (important source) - in Turkish
language (wrote poetry)
Used the term Hindustan - describe geography, fauna and culture of
the inhabitants of the subcontinent; (but not like modern political and
nationalist term)
Amir Kushru (14th century) - used the word Hind in same sense
Humayun
Ruled the Mughal empire between 1530-1540, and in 1555
son of Babur
Fought many battles to retain the area conquered by Babur; Mirza
Kamran's (his brother) ambitions weakened Humayan's cause against
Afghan competitiors
Defeated by Sher Shah Sur in 1540 at Chausa and Kanauj; flew to Iran,
received help from Safavid Shah
brought Painters Mir Sayyid Ali and Abdus Samad to Delhi; (painter
Bihaz - well know painter at Safavid court)
Sher Shah Sur died in 1545, and Humayun regained Delhi in 1555, but
dies that very year
Humayun's tomb commissioned by his wife Bega Begum
Sher Shah Sur
Originally Sher Khan, adopted title Sher Shah Sur after defeating
Humayun
Ruled from Bengal to Indus
Reorganised the revenue, judicial and administration system -
taken best practices from Alauddin Khalji;
Built roads and rest houses (Grand Truck Road from Chittagong to
Kabul) (NH 1 and NH2)
His Changes formed the basis of the future Mughal rule
His Successors were weak, therefore Humayun could take over
Akbar
1556-1605
13 When he assumed the throne
His adviser was Bairam Khan (won the 2nd Battle of Panipat against
Hemu, minister of Adil Shah from Bengal)
Many interesting Conquests (Malwa, Gondwana, Chittor,
Ahmadnagar); faced the revolts of his half-brother Mirza Hakim
Qandahar was seized from the Safavids, Kabul and Kashmir annexed.
Campaigns in the Deccan started.
Also read about: Todar Mal (land revenue), Birbal, Din-i-Ilahi, Ibadat
Khana, his jizya policy, Suhi-i-kul, his Rajput policy, Abul Fazl's Ain-i-
Akbari and Akbarnama, Basawan
tax fixed on each crop in cash;
zabt revenue system -province - circles - each circle own schedule of
revenue rates for individual crops;
Administration
subas (subadar - political and military) - for peace and order -
subadar help from bakhshi, sadr, faujdars and kotwal
diwan - financial officer for each suba;
Architecture: Fatehpur sikri, Buland Darwaza, Agra Fort
Ibadat Khana - religious meetings;
sulh-i kul - universal peace;
persian became the language of administration at all levels;
Muhammad Husayn of Kashmir - calligrapher at Akbar's court (Zarrin
qalam)
abolished tax on pilgrimage in 1563 and jizya in 1564; Rajputs and
Indian Muslims (Shaikhzadas) - entered the imperial service.
Jharoka darshan - introduced - objective of broadening the
acceptance of the imperial authority as part of popular faith.
contemporary
Sultan Suleyman - ruler of Turkey - al qanuni
Shah Abbas - safavid ruler of Iran
Czar Ivan IV - Russian ruler;
Queen Elizabeth I
William shakespeare;
Jahangir
1605-1627
Earlier called Salim (Salim and Anarkali story)
Made peace with Mewar (after almost a century of rivalry between the
Mughals and Mewar)
Married Nur Jahan, the Wife of Sher Afghan, the governor of Bengal -
Jahangir struck silver coins bearing his own titles on one side and on
the other the inscription "struck in the name of the Queen Begum, Nur
Jahan".
Shalimar Bagh (Kashmir)
Chain of justice; Abu'l Hasan - painter
Shah Jahan
1628-1658
Earlier called prince Khurram
Known for the love of his wife Mumtaz Mahal
Qandahar was lost to the Safavids;
Taj Mahal, Jama Masjid, Red Fort, Shalimar Bagh (Lahore)
Aurangzeb
1659-1707
Defeated and killed Dara Shikoh, the son favoured by Shah Jahan to
take the Mughal throne
Fought many wars, especially against Shivaji in the Deccan
Prince Akbar rebelled against Aurangzeb and recieved support from
the Marathas and Deccan Sultanate. Fled to Safavid Iran. After Akbar's
rebellion Aurangzeb sent armies against the Deccan Sultanates;
Bijapur annexed 1685; Golcunda 1687.
Stayed in Deccan for 25 years, died in Ahmednagar in 1707
Reimposed jizya and destroyed many temples
Removed jizya in Mewar, gave grants to Hindu maths and temples
Too much money spend by Shah Jahan and Aurangazed, empire
became weak
Later Mughal Period
Considered weak due to
Auranzeb's misguided policies (religious, Deccan)
Jagirdari crisis
Strong independent states
External pressures of Europeans and Arabs (Nadir Shah, Ahmad Ali
Abdali)
Weak rulers and vast empire
1709 - Bahadur Shah
1712 - Jahandar Shah
1713 - Farruksiyar (Farman to British)
Nadir Shah and Ahmad Shah
1739: Nadir Shah of Persia invaded India
Took away the Kohinoor diamond and the peacock throne
Ahmad Shah Abdali also made many invasions.
Delhi, Agra and the surrounding areas began to declien
As the Mughals declined, the British gained power
Revenue policy
bulk of its income from agricultural production; 85% in villages;
cultivation based on individual land ownership
Sources: Ain-i-akbari; regional accounts; records of the East India
company;
Babar Nama - agriculture; settlements - can disappear in a night;
Irrigation using a wheel
Mansabdars and Jagirdars
mansab - rank/position; mansabdar - who hold a mansab
mansab decides rank, salary and military responsibility;
Rank and salary by Zat number
military responsibility - to maintain specified number of sawar;
(register and branded them to receive salary)
Mansabdar salary - revenue assignments (jagirs);
Mansabdars did not reside in or administer Jagirs (but muqtis
under iqta's used to do); had the rights to the revenue of their
assignment, servants used to collect them; mansabdars used to be
somewhere else at that time;
Agriculture
Basic unit of agricultural society - village; varied topography; forest
areas made up a substantial proportion of territory;
factors for the constant expansion of agriculture: abundance of land,
labour and mobility of peasants
Basic staple - rice, wheat and millets
jins-i-kamil - perfect crops - cotton and sugercane; oilseeds and lentils
Tobacco - arrived first in Deccan spread to northern India; Ain - does
not mention it in the list of crops in northern India. (Jahangir - banned
it - ineffective; by the end of 17th century - major article of
consumption)
17th Century new crops - Maize (via Africa and Spain); tomatoes,
potatoes and chillies; pineapple and papaya
Village community
direct correlation between caste, poverty and social status; correlation
not so marked at intermediate levels - some form of mobility present;
Village panchayats - people of the village with hereditary rights over
the property; heterogeneous body with all caste; decisions binding on
all members; Head - muqaddam/mandal - held office till they enjoy
confidence of village elders; function of headman - supervise the
preparation of village accounts, assisted by the patwari (accountant) of
the panchayat
funds - contributions made by individuals; to entertain revenue
official and community welfare activities
ensure caste boundaries;
authority to levy fines and punish (ex: expulsion)
Jati panchayats - Rajasthan - similar functions at Jati level
begar - unpaid labour
status of woman - important resource - bride price and remarriages
(Child bearers, high mortality rates); had to work on fields
right to inherit property; Zamindaris as well
Men - head of hoursehold; woman - commodity of men
Forests and Tribes
Scrubland (kharbandi); Forest dwellers (jangli) - those livelihood came
from the gathering of forest produce, hunting and shifting agriculture;
season specific;
Peshkash - form of tribute collected by the Mughal State - often
demanded Elephants
commercial agriculture; gum lac - major items of overseas export from
india 17th Century;
Lohanis, Punjab - overland trade India-Afghanistan
Many tribal chieis - become zamindars; Ahom kings - Paiks (obliged
military services provider)
16th Century - war was a common occurrence;
Zamindars - all intermediaries;
lived off agriculture, not participate directly in agriculture
enjoyed social and economic privileges by virtue of
their superior status in rural society
performed Khidmat (services) for the state
held extensive personal lands - milkiyat (property) - private use;
can sell;
collect revenue on behalf of the state (compensated financially by
state)
control over military resources; qilachas (fortresses); armed
contingent
expanded Zamindaris by conquest; slow process - colonisation of new
lands, transfer of rights, order of the state and purchase
buying and selling of Zamindaris accelerated the process of
monetisation of the countryside. Zamindars sold the produce from
their milkiyat lands; established markets
element of reciprocity, paternalism and patronage!
Bhakti saints - did not portray Zamindards, the moneylenders as
exploiters
peasants supported them in rebellion
Land Revenue System
daftar of the diwan - responsible for supervising the fiscal system of
the empire;
specific info: extent of agri land and produce from these lands;
assessment - jama; collected amount- hasil; both cultivated and
cultivable lands were measured;
amil-guzar (revenue collector); payment in cash and kind;
amin - official responsible for ensuring that imperial regulations were
carried out in the provinces;
akbar: Polaj (cultivated annually), Parauti (left out for some time),
Chachar (fallow 3-4 years); Banjar (fallow >5 years); one third of
produce - Royal dues
Mansabdari System - military cum bureacratic apparatus - responsible
for looking after the civil and military affairs
paid in cash (naqdi); revenue assignments (jagirs)
kankut (grain estimates); batai/bhaoli; khet-batai (divide the fields
after they are sown); lang batai (heaps divided) pg 104;
Ain-i Akbari: completed in 1598
Five books (daftars)
First three books - administrations
manzil-abdali - imperial household and its maintenance
sipah-abadi - military and civil administration and
establishment of servants
includes notices and short biographical sketches of
imperial officials (mansabdars), learned men, poets and
artists
mulk-abadi - fiscal side of the empire and rich quantitative
information on revenue rates; geographic, topographic and
economic profile of all subas and their administrative and
fiscal divisions (sarkars, paraganas and mahals)
sarkars below the suba: parganat/mahal, qila, arazi, naqdi,
suyurghal, zamindars Pg: 107
fourth and fifth book - religious, literacy and cultural traditions
Translated Vol 1 - Henry Blochmann - 1873; Two volumes - H.S. Jarrett
(1894)
Ain completely departed from the tradition of writing only about
political events as it recorded information about the empire and the
people of India.
Society and Culture
Mansabdari system (Zat and Sawa rank, jagir)
Khalisa land: owned directly by the emperor
Architecture
Paintings: Mughal paintings were Persian miniatures, especially used to
illustrate manuscripts; Rajput art had many schools in in
Hindustani classical music flourished (Tansen)
Ramacharitmanas by Tulsidas
Important Sanskrit works like Upanishads and the epic translated into
Persian
Important historical accounts produced.
Lesson 10
The Marathas
Kingdom arose after the breakup of the Bahamani empire
Hindu kingdom of the Deccan (Maharashtra and Karnataka)
Shivaji rose to prominence in 1647
Aurangzeb sent Raja Jai Singh to defeat him
Raja Jai and Shivaji made an agreement; shivaji agreed to visit Aurangzeb's
court
Felt ignores, refused to become a mansabdar, was imprisoned; Escaped
1674: crowned himself king
Shivaji's son Shambhaji wasn't as efficient
killed by the Mughals
His brother Rajaram succeeded him, who died in 1700
His widow Tara Bai and grandson Shahu succeeded
Peshwa's became powerful
Most powerful succession state; Achilles heel: the families lack unit;
Established an all-time empire, but didn't administer well; Important
reason for downfall of Mughal
The control of the Peshwas (Chief ministers) began with Balaji Vishvanath
in 1713 - obtained rights to chauth and sardeshmukhi of the Deccan; His
son, Peshwa Baji Rao I stated the confederacy of the Maratha chiefs.
Peshwa Baji Rao (1702 - 1740) plundered upto Delhi, extended the empire,
obtained Chauth and Sardeshmukhi of the Deccan
The Five Families - united on occasion (1775-82), quarreled more often
among themselves
1. Peshwas of Pune
2. Bhonsle of Nagpur
3. Holkars of Indore
4. Gaikwad of Baroda
5. Sindhia of Gwalior
Marathas fought the 3rd Battle of Panipat with Agmad Shah Abdali in
1761; lost, weakened; Death of Madhavrao I
First Anglo-Maratha War 1775-1782
Succession trouble within the Marathas: Nana Phadnavis vs Raghunath
Rao
Treaty of Surat 1775 - Raghunath gets English soldiers in exchange for
territory
Treaty of Purandhar 1776 - English discard older promise, give
Raghunath only pension.
1769 - English lost, signed Treaty of Wadgaon; Hastings rejected
treaty, sent force again.
1782 - Treaty of Salbai
peace for 20 years; Exchange of territories
Second Anglo-Maratha War 1803-1805
1800: Nana Phadnavis died, war of succession began
1802: Peshwa Baji Rao II accepted subsidiary alliance under Treaty of
Bassien
Other Maratha families offended, launched war => English won,
imposed subsidiary alliance over Sindhia's and Bhonsles.
Third Anglo-Maratha War 1817-1819
1813: Charter Act ended EIC monopoly in China (except tea)
Maratha's impoverished mercenary army (pindaris) began plundering
EIC areas.
English overcame Scindhia's ,Peshwa's and Holkar's
1818: Peshwaship abolished.